The widespread use of coal in the north is causing the lower life expectancy

Chinese citizens living in the northern part of the country have a lower life expectancy than those in the south, according to a new study.

The study, led by Michael Greenstone from the environmental economics department at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (who was accompanied by an Israeli and two Chinese scholars), said that heavy pollution in northern China causes citizens in that area to have lower lifespans than those in the south.

In fact, the study says that the 500 million people who live north of the Huai River will lose 2.5 billion years of life expectancy because of air pollution. More specifically, each northerner has a 5.5-year drop in life expectancy compared to southerners.

This cut in life expectancy, according to the study, is mainly due to outdoor air pollution in the north. The concentration of particulates north of the Huai was 184 micrograms per cubic meter higher than in the south. This is about 55 percent greater in the north than south.

This much air pollution is leading to cardiorespiratory diseases and other health problems related to breathing this in. The pollution is caused by the use of free coal for boilers for winter heating north of the river. Also, coal-fired factories are extremely common in the north compared to the south.

The study analyzed health and pollution data collected by Chinese officials from 1981 to 2001.

“It highlights that in developing countries there’s a trade-off in increasing incomes today and protecting public health and environmental quality,” said Greenstone. “And it highlights the fact that the public health costs are larger than we had thought.”

The researchers hope that this study pushes China to make greater environmental protection laws and take health risks associated with air pollution more seriously.

All the functions of every federal three letter agency could be handled better at the state level with congressional oversight. States know the best interests of its citizens better than any federal bureaucracy. EPA,IRS,ATF,FBI,TSA,NEA,DHS etc.. all need to go away.

Easy to armchair that, but there are numerous real world examples that say otherwise. Especially related to the EPA.

Let's use a more practical example say one of the up river states saw huge potential to damn the Missisippi river. That would have pretty massive consequences downstream.

Congress isn't the answer, they are worthless partisan morons. What is needed is what the EPA was supposed to be. An non-political agencey driven to compromise what is best in this senario. Now they are just a tool of both parties, that is why they are useless not simply because they are a federal agency.

Poor example because the Mississippi was damned by the ARMY corp of engineers for flood control decades before the EPA even existed. The truth is we got along just fine without the EPA most of what it has done that has been good would have eventually been done by individual states. People now are so condition towards a nanny state mentality they can no longer imagine doing for themselves.

quote: The truth is we got along just fine without the EPA most of what it has done that has been good would have eventually been done by individual states.

You obviously don't read history, because the real TRUTH is that there was a time during the industrial revolution, and to some extent in modern times, that there was massive large scale dumping of toxic waste. That is the TRUTH, absolute fact, no reason to argue it. It happened, and it was not policed well by local officals. In fact there were bought and paid for state officials that turned a blind eye.

You simply saying someting is the truth does not make it so.

Take a modern example. There are concerns over fracking right now. Real concerns, not made up FUD. No one can say exactly what the impacts truly are, but there are concerns. But do you think that the TX state legislature will allow any kind of controls, or heck even studies on the impacts of fracking? If you think there is a snowball's chance in hell that TX will regulate itself, I want some of what your smoking. Now if there was a high degree of certainty that any and all impacts would be confined to TX, then I'm with you let them do what they want.

Now I 100% agree that our central government is grossly overpowered and way too powerful. However you seem to be taking the equally extreme position that we don't need one at all. IMHO that position is equally idiotic. Some things do need REASONABLE central regulation, primarily those things where the impact cannot be 100% confined to that state.

Oh and to your debunking of the flood example. How can you argue that daming it by the ARMY corp is a good thing, clearly they are an evil central agency making dams and taking away State rights...Way to totally prove my point, that in fact reasonable central agency action can be a good thing.